An independent commission has heard claims that the Bush administrationfailed to act on intelligence in the run-up to September 11. The charges areuntrue, argues Condoleezza Rice.
The al-Qaeda terrorist network posed a threat to the United States for almost a decade before the attacks of September 11th, 2001. Throughout that period - during the eight years of the Clinton administration and the first eight months of the Bush administration prior to September 11th - the US government worked hard to counter the al-Qaeda threat.
During the transition, president-elect George Bush's national security team was briefed on the Clinton administration's efforts to deal with al-Qaeda. The seriousness of the threat was well understood by the president and his national security principals.
In response to my request for a presidential initiative, the counterterrorism team, which we had held over from the Clinton administration, suggested several ideas, some of which had been around since 1998 but had not been adopted. No plan to tackle al-Qaeda was turned over to the new administration.
We adopted several of these ideas. We committed more funding to counterterrorism and intelligence efforts. We increased efforts to go after al-Qaeda's finances. We increased American support for anti-terror activities in Uzbekistan.
We pushed hard to arm the Predator unmanned aerial vehicles so we could target terrorists with greater precision. But the Predator was designed to conduct surveillance, not carry weapons. Arming it presented many technical challenges and required extensive testing.
Military and intelligence officials agreed that the armed Predator was simply not ready for deployment before the autumn of 2001. In any case, the Predator was not a silver bullet that could have destroyed al-Qaeda or stopped September 11th.
We also considered a modest spring 2001 increase in funding for the Northern Alliance. At that time, the Northern Alliance was clearly not going to sweep across Afghanistan and dispose of al-Qaeda. It had been battered by defeat and held less than 10 per cent of the country. Only the addition of American air power, with US special forces and intelligence officers on the ground, allowed the Northern Alliance its historic military advances in late 2001.
We folded this idea into our broader strategy of arming tribes throughout Afghanistan to defeat the Taliban.
Let us be clear: even their most ardent advocates did not contend that these ideas, even taken together, would have destroyed al-Qaeda. We judged that the collection of ideas presented to us were insufficient for the strategy President Bush sought.
The president wanted more than a laundry list of ideas simply to contain al-Qaeda or "roll back" the threat. Once in office, we quickly began crafting a comprehensive new strategy to eliminate the al-Qaeda network. The president wanted more than occasional, retaliatory cruise-missile strikes. He told me he was "tired of swatting flies".
Through the spring and summer of 2001, the national security team developed a strategy to eliminate al-Qaeda, which was expected to take years. Our strategy marshalled all elements of national power to take down the network, not just respond to individual attacks with law enforcement measures.
Our plan called for military options to attack al-Qaeda and Taliban leadership, ground forces and other targets. It meant taking the fight to the enemy where he lived. It focused on the crucial link between al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
We would attempt to compel the Taliban to stop giving al-Qaeda sanctuary, and if they refused, we would have sufficient military options to remove the Taliban regime. The strategy focused on the key role of Pakistan in this effort and the need to get Pakistan to drop its support of the Taliban. This became the first major foreign-policy strategy document of the Bush administration - not Iraq, not the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, but eliminating al- Qaeda.
Before September 11th, we closely monitored threats to our nation. President Bush revived the practice of meeting with the director of the CIA every day - meetings that I attended. And I met CIA director George Tenet regularly, and frequently reviewed aspects of the counterterror effort.
Through the summer, increasing intelligence "chatter" focused almost exclusively on potential attacks overseas. Nonetheless, we asked for any indication of domestic threats and directed our counterterrorism team to coordinate with domestic agencies to adopt protective measures. The FBI and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) alerted airlines, airports and local authorities, warning of potential attacks on Americans.
Despite what some have suggested, we received no intelligence that terrorists were preparing to attack the US using airplanes as missiles, though some analysts speculated that terrorists might hijack airplanes to try to free US-held terrorists. The FAA even issued a warning to airlines and aviation security personnel saying: "the potential for a terrorist operation, such as an airline hijacking to free terrorists incarcerated in the United States, remains a concern".
We now know that the real threat had been in the US since at least 1999. The plot to attack New York and Washington had been hatching for nearly two years. According to the FBI, 16 of the 19 hijackers were already in the country by June 2001.
Even if we had known exactly where Osama bin Laden was and the armed Predator had been available to strike him, the September 11th hijackers almost certainly would have carried out their plan. Even if the Northern Alliance had somehow managed to topple the Taliban, the September 11th hijackers were here in America, not in Afghanistan.
President Bush has acted swiftly to unify and streamline our efforts to secure the American homeland. He has transformed the FBI into an agency dedicated to catching terrorists and preventing future attacks. The president and Congress, through the USA Patriot Act, have broken down the legal and bureaucratic walls that hampered intelligence and law enforcement agencies from collecting and sharing vital threat information prior to September 11th. Those who now argue for rolling back the Patriot Act's changes invite us to forget the important lesson we learned on September 11th.
In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, the president, like all Americans, wanted to know who was responsible. It would have been irresponsible not to ask questions about all possible links, including to Iraq - a nation that had supported terrorism and tried to kill a former president.
Once advised that there was no evidence Iraq was responsible for September 11th, the president told his National Security Council on September 17th that Iraq was not on the agenda and that the initial response would be to target al-Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Because of President Bush's vision and leadership, our nation is safer. We have won battles in the war on terror but the war is far from over. However long it takes, this great nation will prevail.
Condoleezza Rice is National Security Adviser to President Bush.